The ammonia-water system at high pressures: Implications for the methane of Titan
- Research areas:
- Year:
- 2005
- Authors:
-
- Olivier Grasset
- J Pargamin
- Journal:
- PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE
- Volume:
- 53
- Number:
- 4
- Pages:
- 371-384
- Month:
- April
- ISSN:
- 0032-0633
- BibTex:
- Abstract:
- The Cassini/Huygens mission will provide an accurate description of
Titan's surface features. One important outcome of these data is that it
will help for understanding the processes of methane exchange between
Titan's interior and its atmosphere. Such a correlation between surface
features and internal processes involving methane will be highly
simplified if the nature of methane reservoirs is understood. In this
paper, the behavior of methane within Titan is investigated using both
data on methane clathrate stability and data on the ammonia-water
system.
A mathematical description of the different liquidus of the
ammonia-water system is proposed. It is shown that the low pressure and
water rich domain of the system is very well constrained. On the
contrary, both high pressure ices and ammonia hydrates domains are still
very badly understood because of the lack of experimental data.
Nonetheless, several important characteristics of both ices and hydrates
stability are described. These data are used for proposing a new model
which computes the thermodynamical characteristics of the liquid layer
within Titan. This provides new constraints on the temperature and
composition fields within the liquid layer of Titan which indicates that
the dissociation of methane clathrates in the deep interior is almost
impossible.
In the last part, the methane clathrate behavior within the different
layer of Titan's interior is investigated. Due to the density contrasts
between methane clathrates and ices, it will be shown that methane is
certainly trapped within large clathrate reservoirs below the upper
conductive lid of Titan. Further ascent and dissociation of clathrate
into gaseous methane + ice must then be associated with tectonic and/or
volcanic processes which allow rapid ascent without cooling of
clathrates. Indeed, the dissociation is only possible at very shallow
depth only if hot material from the ice layer can reach the surface
rapidly. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.